TOSHIYUKI MIYAMA — Yamataifu (with Masahiko Sato)

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TOSHIYUKI MIYAMA - Yamataifu (with Masahiko Sato) cover
3.95 | 2 ratings | 1 review
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Album · 1972

Tracklist

A Ichi
B1 Ni
B2 San

Line-up/Musicians

- Masahiko Sato/ Arrangement , Electric Piano,
- Toshiyuki Miyama/ Conductor
- Masao Kunisada/ Bass
- Masaru Hiromi/ Drums
- Kozaburo Yamamoto/ Guitar
- Yoshinobu Imashiro/ Piano
- Kazumi Oguro, Shinji Nakayama/ Saxophone [Alto]
- Miki Matsui/ Saxophone [Baritone]
- Kiyoshi Saito, Shoji Maeda/ Saxophone [Tenor]
- Masamichi Uetaka, Seiichi Tokura, Takeshi Aoki, Teruhiko Kataoka/ Trombone
- Bunji Murata, Kenichi Sano, Koji Hadori, Kunio Fujisaki/ Trumpet

About this release

Toshiba Records ‎– TJ-9004(Japan)

Recorded in 1972

Reissued on Express / Far East same year(ETJ-65019,Japan, alternate cover)

Thanks to snobb for the addition



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TOSHIYUKI MIYAMA YAMATAIFU (WITH MASAHIKO SATO) reviews

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Members reviews

FunkFreak75
This is an artist/composer (and his arranger) who no doubt was extremely inspired by America's Free Jazz, Post Bop, and more-recent Jazz-Rock fusion experimentation. My feeling is that, as a modern big band leader and world music enthusiast, he would have gotten on famously with American band leader DON ELLIS.

A. "Ichi" (19:21) Is this really jazz-rock fusion? Despite its definite inspiration from both John Coltrane, Ornette Coleman, and Pharoah Sanders, it also expresses a debt to Tony Williams, Don Ellis, and Miles Davis. It's definitely avant garde--like 1960s big band avant garde--and, I believe, highly scripted. There's even a similarity here to the earliest music published by Magma. The longer it plays, the more I find myself liking it! The odd electronic sounds remind me very much of some of the weird sounds coming out of Teo Macero's treatment of Miles Davis' band's Bitches Brew songs as well as Herbie Hancock's upcoming work with his Headhunters and beyond while it also traipses into the realm of soundtrack electronica. Part 2 of the jam sees a turn toward a quieter, more sparsely populated instrumental palette while the individual and banked horns take turns blasting their two cents worth, again sounding more Big Band-like (even more DON ELLIS-like) as the instruments reconstitute and rebuild their momentum. Fascintating, interesting, entertaining, (36.75/40)

B1. "Ni" (12:17) weird sound and harmonic experiments in discordant, sound-fx-type chiller music that, while employing the latest in electronic instrumental sound that were commonly being incorporated into the jazz-rock infusionists, is not as Jazz-Rock oriented as it is avant garde classical--though there is a lot in common here, for me, with the awful stuff coming from Miles Davis' Bitches Brew. It also reminds me of the chaotic cacophonous music used in the pre-cognition chimpanzee scenes in the 2001: A Space Odyssey soundtrack. The drumming, when there is any (after the 6:50 mark), sometimes outright sucks, at other times comes across as absolutely brilliant. This is a very impressive "song"--especially for the development and evolution of avant-garde jazz. It is certainly entertaining, but not exactly what I'd call enjoyable music--and certainly not the type of music you would use for a dance party. (21.5/25)

B2. "San" (4:53) opens up with some fast moving lounge jazz of a very serious nature. But then the big band horns enter and make it obvious that this music could hardly be played in a dark, smokey jazz lounge--at least not the ones made de rigeur since the secretive Underworld mentality of the Beatnik and BeBop eras had formed around this kind of music. Then, the crazy, polyphonic and polymetric practices of Toshiyuki's music takes over. Again: impressive if not very cozy or heart-warming. (9.25/10)

Total Time 36:31

Not the kind of music I was expecting from a 1972 "Jazz-Rock Fusion" release: this is more akin to the work that French-Belgian bands UNIVERS ZERO and PRÉSENT would be doing at the end of the decade.

P.S. The version I found of this album has the black and red cover and is titled "Yamataifu" with MASAHIKO SATO listed as one of Toshiyuki's collaborators--the arranger and electric pianist.

A-/4.5 stars; an excellent, possibly masterpiece-level recording of avant garde Jazz-Rock that would most highly recommended to those prog lovers who are into highly technical yet experimental avant garde music.

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  • chrijom

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